Friday, March 18, 2016

The Seed Within Planting the Seed

I started this blog in 2011 as a vehicle to promote a simple,
time-tested idea: By sharing basic skills we can build more resilient
communities. A deeper look at the concept reveals that it’s not just the skills
being shared that strengthen the community, it’s the relationships being built.
At an even deeper level, we see that the values that skill sharing promotes outlast
individual relationships and inform new relationships as they come into being: Skill
sharing encourages the recognition that our own security and happiness is
enhanced by the security and happiness of our neighbors, and our neighbors’
neighbors.

Taken sentence by sentence, that’s plenty to think about.
I’m fond of observing that when one plants a seed in the garden with a child, one
plants two seeds at once: There’s the seed
that goes into the ground, and there are the seeds of connection, relationship,
possibility, and wonder that grow in the child. Oops, that’s more than two!

Yet it’s the same with sharing skills and learning
experiences with people of any age. By sharing such learning experiences, we
build knowledge, relationships,
trust, and enduring pro-social values.

However, such natural connections are for the most part broken
or breaking in American life, especially in relationship to skills connected to
food, clothing, shelter, and health care. Taking the place of these basic
social functions, we find monetized relationships and high-energy tools. This
is why it’s possible to live in a typical American neighborhood and have no
idea who our neighbors are. We drive energy-intensive cars to our highly
productive jobs, and then some of our surplus productivity (our “earnings”) is electronically
tube-fed back into our households to pay for the privilege. As a byproduct of
this arrangement, we also see a shift in values that decouples oursense
of well-being from that of our neighbors.
The attitude that starts to take hold is: To heck with them. I have my own car,
my own TV. I worked hard for these things. Get your own.

All of this would be bad enough, but on a practical level, if
at some point the money system breaks down or the tools and devices can’t be
powered up, what do we really have left? We don’t know how to provide for our
basic needs, most of us don’t have local relationships in place to help us solve
that problem, and judging by how things are going, many people do not even possess
the kinds of values that would help navigate toward real solutions.

Thus we can identify several levels for social intervention:
materials, skills, relationships, and the values that support the transfer of
skills and the development of relationships. Granted, it seems a tall order. We
do not have the resources to address these problems one at a time. Fortunately,
it isn’t necessary, because (and this is an amazing thought!) it is not possible to do one thing at a time.
The world simply doesn’t work like that. Instead, as we saw in the example of
planting a seed with a child, everything we do propagates consequences in
multiple directions.

Permaculture has a design concept called “stacking
functions” that makes use of this. In a land use design project, the concept of
stacking functions means that any element of the design, be it a tree, chicken
coop or a compost heap, can perform multiple services simultaneously. So, when I
kept chickens, I planted a mulberry tree to the south of the coop, and placed a
compost heap nearby under another tree. The chicken manure fed the trees, and the
trees fed, cooled, and protected the chickens from airborne predators. Together
the trees kept the compost shaded and moist while the chickens turned the
compost, feeding it with their droppings while the compost fed them with bugs
and worms. And that’s just the beginning. Ultimately, the system produced eggs,
for example, as well as nutrient-rich compost for my garden.

Permaculture imitates natural systems in its design processes.
In the case of stacking functions, the underlying reality is that no action
generates a single, linear outcome. Since everything does many things at once, it
should be possible, assuming we're willing to more comprehensively account for them, to start aligning these consequences in desirable ways.

The relevant point here is that functions are always “stacked,” though perhaps
not necessarily in ways that lead to positive outcomes. When I get in my car, for
example, I’m not just moving myself from place to place, I’m also creating a
zone of lethal hazard around myself, putting social distance between myself and
pedestrians, arrogating enormous physical space and material resources for myself and my vehicle,
promoting the proliferation of ugly, auto-related infrastructure like parking
lots and traffic courts, supporting the demand for petroleum and the despotic regimes funded by it, and of course befouling the air and ultimately
helping to kill off the oceans and wreck the climate. And that’s just for
starters.

But hey, I’m just driving to pick my kids up from school.

Yet in this example, perhaps the worst effect of all is the
mass hypnosis that makes this seem both normal and desirable, stunting the
imaginations of all who buy into it. And this is true everywhere we look: chemical
agriculture, US foreign policy, law, medicine, education, you name it. All of
these are proliferating negative consequences in multiple directions while our
attention is focused only on the narrow outcomes connected to their
ostensible purposes. The conditioning is: Look at the grain pouring into the grain elevator, don’t
look at the algae bloom from agricultural runoff that renders Lake Erie’s water
unfit for human consumption. See the burger in a bag, but ignore the
person handing it to us who is barely scraping by, ignore the vanishing South American
rainforest felled for commodity crop soybean production, and ignore the species
extinctions and loss of cultures and language among the indigenous people of
the region.

I’ve been saying for years [for example, see here]
that the positive side of the fragmented thinking evident in our current
systems is that it results in a proliferation of points of effective action.
The food system is a great example, given that we see breaks in critical relationships
all the way from soil to table. Every apparent break is a place where
participation can forge a new connection, whether it’s growing our own food,
building relationships with our growers, or preparing food from scratch instead
of buying into the cult of commercially prepared foods.

That still holds true, but now I see how much more we’re
really doing when we do these things. Since as we have seen, “stacking
functions” isn’t just a great design idea, it’s
the rule, then replacing a broken connection with a healthy one will have
manifold impact. So for example, replacing fast food with home cooked meals has
profound ramifications:We’ve
filled our homes with delicious smells, we’ve taught our children what real
food tastes like, how to value it, and maybe how to cook it; we’ve nourished
ourselves deep into our cells, we’ve made our love tangible through our
connection with the earth’s bounty, we’ve changed how we spend, we’ve demonstrated
that our families are worth caring for—and that’s just for starters.

If a part of that home cooked meal comes from a home garden,
we have added to our outdoor time with healthy exercise, improved the soil and its
capacity to hold carbon and retain moisture, improved our diets with low-cost
vegetables, eliminated (if we’re smart) the use of cosmetic lawn chemicals on
the soil that feeds us, cut some of the carbon footprint in our energy-intensive
food system, kept yard waste onsite as a soil amendment, and taught our
children where food comes from. Even something as simple as recycling has huge
knock-on effects: when newspaper and cardboard is recycled, it’s not just the
oxygen-breathing trees we save, but also the carbon that is normally emitted in
paper manufacture from virgin materials, plus the recycling jobs created
locally, watersheds protected wherever forests remain standing … and much else.

Is it enough? Have we tilted the scales toward
sustainability? No—not by a long shot. Does this concern me? Yes.

However, I’m still feeling hopeful. True, our culture’s
fragmented thinking has created quite a mess as it has been projected onto a
world built on the laws of interconnection and wholeness. But what gives me
hope is not just that we can make a little difference here and there by
changing how we think and what we do. What’s really hopeful is that we’re doing
a lot more than we think we are – we’re always planting many seeds at once, and
of course every seed has the potential of many seeds within it. These can
include changes on all levels, extending even to the values and cultural norms
that drive us. Thus, my hope is not based on the complacent attitude that we’re
already “doing all we can,” so everything is bound to be okay. Rather, I’m
excited by the fact that knowing how powerful our actions are can embolden us
to kick it up a notch. Let’s do it!

Hi Clifford, I'm pleased that I came across your blog and this post in particular. I am one of many motivated folks in Melbourne, Australia who have enrolled in the community leadership in sustainability program run by two local councils. I recently had a conversation with another 'member' on Saturday about the challenge of maintaining a positive outlook for the future. One of the presenters told us about Paul Hawken and his book, Blesed Unrest. I'm sure you would have come across it. This kind of input is just what is needed, to know that we are not alone in wanting to do whatever we can in our own communities to contribute to the wider world.

Thank you, Ruth! I read The Ecology of Commerce, another of Paul Hawken's books, but not Blessed Unrest. About maintaining a positive outlook, it feels to me like we need to be completely honest about our feelings without getting mired or overwhelmed -- which will happen anyway, from time to time. For me, self care, inspiring and supportive companionship, and camaraderie are all helpful when that happens.